Category Archives: This ‘n’ That

Ventura Surf Club donates over $10,000 to local groups

The Ventura Surf Club makes annual donations to local groups that meet their club credo; “To preserve, promote and perpetuate the values, beliefs and essence of surfing”.  The donations are funded primarily from the annual California Street Classic surf contest, which runs in conjunction with the Aloha Beach Festival in Ventura every September.

This year’s donations are the highest amount in the history of the surf club.  “I am proud to be the president of a club that shows so much aloha.  The hard work of our members make these donations possible.  It’s great to give back to the community” said Andy Sassen, surf club president.

This year’s recipients include The Boys and Girls Club surf program, Junior Lifeguards Scholarship fund, Best Day Foundation, Stream-keeper, Ventura Scholastic surf team.  The Ventura Surf Club is open to surfers of all skill levels and welcomes families.  For more information, visit www.venturasurfclub.org.

 

Brennan has been on the forefront of coastal and wetland protection policy

Brian Brennan joins Ventura Port District Board

Former Ventura Mayor Brian Brennan is the newest member of the Ventura Port District Board of Commissioners and is a welcome addition to the team. Brennan served as a Ventura city councilman from 1998-2013 and mayor from 2003-2005.

Born and raised in Galway, Ireland, Brennan became a United States citizen in 1966 and is an advocate for the environment, sustainable communities and social justice. A professional restaurateur for over 25 years, he has opened and operated restaurants in coastal California, Hawaii, Florida and the Virgin Islands.

While serving as chairman of the Ventura Visitors and Convention Bureau, Brennan was one of the founding members of the Ventura County Chapter of the Surfrider Foundation. He is an avid sailor and surfer.

Brennan has been on the forefront of coastal and wetland protection policy both locally, regionally and statewide for all of his adult life, which culminated in an appointment by Gov. Jerry Brown to the California Coastal Commission in 2011. Brennan presently serves as Executive Director of BEACON, a California Joint Powers Authority that advocates for adaptive living shorelines and coastal resiliency in the face of rising sea levels. Its members include Ventura and Santa Barbara counties as well as the cities of Ventura, Oxnard, Port Hueneme, Santa Barbara, Goleta and Carpinteria.

 

 

Gold Coast Transit District announces partnership with the Department of Homeland Security

Gold Coast Transit District, Ventura County’s largest public transit provider announced their partnership with the public awareness campaign of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), “If You See Something, Say Something™.”

“If You See Something, Say Something™” posters and signs will now be visible on buses, transit centers and public spaces in the Gold Coast Transit District service area .

The posters advise citizens in the GCTD’s service area to contact the Department of Homeland Security at 888-705-JRIC (5742) or call 9-1-1 if they see any suspicious activity in or around buses or bus stops.  Citizens and Community Organizations may download a poster, by visiting www.GoldCoastTransit.org.

For more information on the campaign, visit www.dhs.gov/See-Something-Say-Something.

Ventura County Leadership Academy names new board leaders

Mike Paule is the new president and a 30 year resident of Ventura County.  He owns a video production and marketing consulting firm and is an elected director of Triunfo Sanitation District.  Mr. Paule also serves as president of Ventura County Special Districts Association and as trustee on the Conejo/Las Virgenes Future Foundation.

Melissa Baffa will serve as the vice president.  Mrs. Baffa works as the Development Officer at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.  She also serves on the board of directors of the Ventura County Women’s Political Council.

Sharon Cromartie will serve as the Treasurer.  Ms. Cromartie is the VP of Administration at Kids and Families Together, a not-for profit organization serving foster, adoptive, kinship and birth families. She is also a member of the Downtown Ventura Rotary Club and volunteers with the National Disaster Search Dog Foundation.

James Mason will serve as the Secretary.  Mr. Mason has over eighteen years of service in as a public administrator.  He also serves on the board of directors for the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Ventura.

The Ventura County Leadership Academy began as an initiative of the United Way of Ventura County, designed to develop leaders through a curriculum of fifteen full day focus sessions over nine months exploring critical issues and industries in the region.  Ventura County Leadership Academy is in its twenty second year, with over five hundred graduates of the program.

Ventura County Leadership missions to provide unique opportunities learn about Ventura County and to enrich ones leadership capabilities that will ultimately enhance his/her participation in the community.

For more information Ventura County Leadership Academy please contact: Pattie Braga 797-3985 or email [email protected].

 

 

 

Vol. 10, No. 6 – December 21, 2016 – January 3, 2017 – Tech Today

How to securely dispose of your mobile device
by Ken May

Mobile devices, such as smartphones, smartwatches, and tablets, continue to advance and innovate at an astonishing rate. As a result, some people replace their mobile devices as often as every year. Unfortunately, too many people dispose of their devices with little thought on just how much personal data is on them. If your mobile device was issued to you by your employer or has any organizational data stored on it, be sure to check with your supervisor about proper backup and disposal procedures before following the steps below.

Typical information can include:

  • Where you live, work, and places you frequently visit
  • The contact details for everyone in your address book and applications, including family, friends, and coworkers
  • Call history, including inbound, outbound, and missed calls
  • SMS (texting), voice, and multimedia messages
  • Chat sessions within applications like secure chat, games, and social media
  • Location history based on GPS coordinates or cell tower history
  • Web browsing history, search history, cookies, and cached pages
  • Personal photos, videos, audio recordings, and emails
  • Stored passwords and access to personal accounts, such as your online bank or email
  • Access to photos, files, or information stored in the Cloud
  • Any health-related information, including your age, heart rate, blood pressure, or diet

Regardless of how you dispose of your mobile device, such as donating it, exchanging it for a new one, giving it to another family member, reselling it, or even throwing it out, you need to be sure you first erase all of that sensitive information. You may not realize it, but simply deleting data is not enough; it can easily be recovered using free tools found on the Internet. Instead, you need to securely erase all the data on your device, which is called wiping. This actually overwrites the information, ensuring it cannot be recovered or rendering it unrecoverable. Remember, before you wipe all of your data, you most likely want to back it up first. This way, you can easily rebuild your new device.

The easiest way to securely wipe your device is use its “factory reset” function. This will return the device to the condition it was in when you first bought it. We have found that factory reset will provide the most secure and simplest method for removing data from your mobile device. The factory reset function varies among devices:

  • Apple iOS Devices: Settings | General | Reset | Erase All Content and Settings
  • Android Devices: Settings | Privacy | Factory Data Reset

In addition to the data stored on your device, you also need to consider what to do with your SIM card. When you perform a factory reset on your device, the SIM card retains information about your account and is tied to you, the user. If you are keeping your phone number and moving to a new device, talk to your phone service provider about transferring your SIM card. If this is not possible, for example, if your new phone uses a different size SIM card, keep your old SIM card and physically shred or destroy it to prevent someone else from re-using it. Also, be sure to remove any SD cards, if you have them.

If you are not sure about any of the steps covered in this article, take your mobile device to the store you bought it from and get help from a trained technician. Finally, if you are throwing your mobile device away, please consider donating it instead. There are many excellent charitable organizations that accept used mobile devices.

References: SANS Ouch 12/16 Newsletter, smarterforensics.com

Vol. 10, No. 6 – December 21, 2016 – January 3, 2017 – CAPS

Jade Spurr and Annabelle Augustine prepare for an interview on ECTV.

Holiday Wishes
by Elizabeth Rodeno

It is in the spirit of the season, that we share our good fortune with the community at large. Every year, our channels are full of holiday and spiritual programs. We also get to enjoy some of the victories and accomplishments that the City of Ventura and the Ventura Unified School district share during their meetings broadcast live on channel 15.

The El Camino Television students have been spending a lot of time at the media center and we enjoy their energy. They are wrapping up their 1st semester with many shows in the “can”, a phrase that harkens back to those years when film was physical and stored in metal cans. We wax nostalgic but only for a short time when we see the amazing creative work accomplished in the digital age. These students have honed their experience, learning more and more of the craft every time they go behind or in front of the camera. Whether it be performance or lighting they are working to get better and better.

The students have also had their hand in producing longer form specials covering topics in greater depth and length. When they return from the holidays they will launch into the many projects they have already outlined. We are enjoying the great relationship with the staff at El Camino High School, the Ventura Unified School district and the VC Innovates program, a part of the Ventura County of Education.

We are working on so many improvements here at CAPS that we will close to the public for the holiday week and begin transformation of the studio and radio station. We will soon be erecting the first community low power FM transmission tower in the City of Ventura. After receiving unanimous approval from an enthusiastic commission, we move ahead in the process. CAPS Radio, KPPQ-LP 104.1FM will become an integral part of the community and we hope to share this valuable resource with you in 2017. With the opportunity for citizens to share their stories in a different medium that will enhance and support our mission. In such a community oriented city, we will provide an additional resource to everyone. As with our television channels, CAPS Radio will provide top notch facilities, training and opportunities to share stories. This is also a perfect way for the youth to expand their venues and offer those who speak different languages a place on the airwaves.

 

 

Watch channel 6 to hear what the public has to say and watch channel 15 to experience the city’s vision to provide the best and clearest information for all and stay tuned for CAPS Radio at 104.1 FM and streaming through our website.  Go to www.capsmedia.org for all the information.

Routine oil spill training held in Ventura Harbor

Recently a routine oil spill training was held in the Ventura Harbor.  It was performed by the company Clean Seas. They are one of the regions oil and pollution containment and recovery assets.  This day they were deploying containment boom from their trucks.  This containment boom could be used to contain spills in the ocean or block off the Harbor should a large spill threaten our area.  They receive funding from the oil companies and can mobilize very fast with boats, trucks, and masses of people to deal with an incident.   They are the same company with the two large grey oil spill boats that normally dock in the Harbor area.  They always have one boat on the water ready to respond to any incident within the Santa Barbara Channel and beyond.

Photo by George Robertson

Premier America Credit Union donates to Library Foundation

Nancy Schram, Thomas Neuhaus, Donna McNeely, Christina Madaras, Terry Mrvichin, Kathy Long, Tom Robinson, Marty Robinson and Derek Stalcup are all smiles holding a “big check”.

On Dec. 14 Premier America Credit Union presented a $50,000 check to the Ventura County Library Foundation (VCLF) at the Saticoy branch located in Ventura.

Premier America, the Founding and a primary sponsor, is pleased to kick-off the fundraising initiative for the bookmobile, which will provide mobile library service to approximately 70 communities in two-week rotations throughout Ventura County.

Kathy Long, County of Ventura Supervisor, Third District along with VCLF Board members, Nancy Schram, Terry Mrvichin, Tom Robinson, Marty Robinson and the Saticoy Librarian, Derek Stalcup accepted the donation on behalf of the VCLF.

Sandy Berg, Secretary for VCLF said, “This bookmobile will reach all residents of Ventura County no matter how far they live from a branch or what barriers stand in the way of their use of a library.  And, when they enter the bookmobile they will discover a world of not only books but technology including computers and access to all types of STEM learning.  We are so thrilled with the generosity of Premier America in providing us with this gift that will help make this dream come true”.

County Library Foundation supports the Ventura County Library with gifts toward the bookmobile, books and other materials and support of literacy services.  Donations can be mailed to The Ventura County Library Foundation, 5600 Everglades St., Ventura, CA 93003.

“Premier America is excited to partner with the Ventura County Library Foundation to further support the local community by bringing library services directly to those who are currently without access” said Christina Madaras, Director, Community Development & Corporate Citizenship. “We can’t wait for the bookmobile to launch and see barrier-free literacy in action!”

Founded in 1957 Premier America is one of the nation’s largest credit unions, with nearly 100,000 members and $2.3 billion in assets. With 20 branches, 9 of them in Ventura County, Premier America provides financial services to those who live, work, worship and attend school in: Camarillo, Oxnard, Simi Valley, Thousand Oaks, Ventura, Westlake Village, Los Angeles County and areas in Houston. To learn more about Premier America, visit PremierAmerica.com.

U.S. Navy Seabee Museum in Port Hueneme is open to the public

Andrew Pyler volunteered to clean the pieces as part of his Eagle Scout project.

by Richard Lieberman

After sorting through more than 14,000 artifacts to find 75 that best represented the history of the Seabees, the curator for exhibits at the U.S. Navy Seabee Museum in Port Hueneme needed to get them ship-shape for display.

So when Andrew Pyler, 14, of Port Hueneme, volunteered to clean the pieces as part of his Eagle Scout project and oversee the work of the rest of his Boy Scout troop, Kim Crowell, Museum Curator welcomed the help. Andrew is directing the efforts of the six other boys in Boy Scout Troop 234.

“They’ve been very careful,” Crowell said, noting the boys have been diligent in their cleanup and cataloging efforts. “We appreciate the help while we have it.”

They’re meticulously and painstakingly cleaning such items as a bombshell cigar holder that Rear Adm. Ben Moreell owned in the 1940s when he founded the U.S. Navy’s construction battalions — CBs, hence the nickname Seabees — that are devoted to engineering and construction projects around the world.

stuff-seabees“Some of these things are so fragile,” said Andrew, who lives in Port Hueneme and is homeschooled. “We have some very delicate flags that just take a light brush. Others need vacuuming. And to remove residue, others need to be polished.”

Andrew said that the Scouts had to be taught what should or shouldn’t be removed or cleaned.

“With boots from Vietnam that still have dirt from Vietnam on them, we keep the dirt and just dust them,” he said.

All 75 of the Seabee artifacts are being photographed so they can be displayed on a website that will commemorate the Seabee’s 75th anniversary next year. Then they will be placed throughout the Seabee Museum as part of its upcoming 75th anniversary exhibit. The various artifacts tie in to some aspect of Seabee history. For example, there’s a large wooden four-sided, flat-top pyramid that represented the effort of all U.S. troops in the 1990s who were in Haiti to help the country establish a democracy.

A featured artifact is a gold-plated Al Kadesih sniper rifle, which was fashioned after the Russian Dragunov rifles and was captured from the collection of Uday Hussain in 2003 in Baghdad. Uday, the eldest son of Saddam Hussein, was killed in a gunfight in 2003. “He would give them as gifts,” Crowell said of the gold-plated rifle, “He had cases of them.”

Elaine Pyler, Andrew’s mother, said the Eagle Scout project is going beyond helping the community: It’s teaching the young people about the past. “When they touch the artifacts, they touch history,” she said. “It’s great to learn what the military does and especially about the Seabees.”

Scoutmaster Dan Estabrook said the Seabees play a major role in the small troop.

“This troop is sponsored by the Navy Seabee Veterans of America Island X-7” he said. “We emphasize core values, duty to country and service to God. Andrew has worked hard,” he added.

Several Seabees are helping out with the cleaning project alongside the Boy Scouts. As part of their documentation, the 75 artifacts had to be carefully lit with a dark backdrop. Professional equipment had to be used to photograph each artifact and identifying information.

Zachary Marble, who is in a school on base and learning the basic job skills of a Seabee, said he was enjoying the project.

“It’s fun,” he said, noting that one artifact is a flag that Seabees carried across the Rhine River during World War II and brought back to the United States. “We’re seeing all this history, and it is getting ourselves into the history.”

Community volunteers are also helping with the project. Lee Burke, of Camarillo, who was taking photos of the artifacts, believes chronicling history is essential.

“Being a historian and being a photographer, I think it’s very important to see those memories in the objects,” Burke said. “This is how we will share them together.”

Crowell said much of the display will be open to the public in January, in plenty of time for the official 75th anniversary of the Seabees on March 5